55 SEO Experts Reveal 3 Favourite Link Building Tools

“If you could only use 3 SEO tools for your link building campaigns which 3 would you choose?”

I wanted to know plain and simple which tools I must seriously consider and what I can live without.

As a newbie blogger I’ve been overwhelmed by all the top 10, 20 and even 100 lists that have got me nowhere closer to choosing a manageable selection of tools. That’s why I decided the only way to know for real was to ask the experts and see if the best tools in the industry would indeed reveal themselves. Well guess what…they have:

Read on to discover each expert’s favourite 3 tools along with their awesome tips on how to use them! You can either skip to your favourite expert using these quick links or grab a coffee, get comfortable and commence scrolling!

BuzzStream – Great tool for blogger outreach and prospecting management. Think of it as your link building CRM with research tools built in (my personal definition of it of course :)). A tool I simply can’t live without. Oh, an important thing, their support is absolutely magnificent. One of the best I have ever seen.

Link Prospector by Citation Labs – A tool for finding link building opportunities. It’s fast, super easy to use and can find plenty of great websites you can build links from. Although as with any tool of that type, the results you get largely depend on what information you put in first (just thought I’d mention).

Rank Tracker – Perhaps not the most ideal tool but the one I use so thought I’d include it here too. It’s good for checking out your rankings but since it runs from your local machine, make sure that you use some sort of proxy or VPN if you want to check results from other location than yours.

I think I’ll be going with Alexa. It records backlinks more quickly than others I think. And I recommend you NOT TO care much about the backlinks and Social Shares. Just continue what you are doing, produce great content and natural links will flow to you.

First off, 3 tools is tough! Link building is so dynamic and encompasses so much. But if I had to only live with 3 tools for link building they would have to be Link Prospector, Google Docs, and BuzzStream.

Google Docs is just invaluable for things like organization, collaboration, and data management. What I mean by data management is being able to slice and dice data for different URLs or links and pull in metrics, contact info, etc. There are also tons of great tools built in Google Docs that one can leverage to generate content ideas and search queries.

Link Prospector is great for quickly developing lists of potential link targets whether it’s guest blogging, niche directories, contests, etc. This tool, I could not live without! It does what many of us had to do manually for years in terms of finding link prospects. It’s also extremely affordable and pays for itself easily.

And Buzzstream is useful for contact management, task management, and finding contact information. You can get alot with the paid version, but their free tools are excellent as well! You can use their free tools to find contact information, generate search queries, build lists, etc.

With these three tools one can build a very successful link building campaign that can last as long as you can keep working.

BuzzStream – this is an essential part of our process at UK Linkology. It allows us to manage large guest posting campaigns with ease, track links and social mentions – even prospect for link building opportunities. The built in CRM is perfect for link building and it makes what can easily spiral out of control into something that’s easily managable.

Ahrefs – I use a couple of different sources for examining link profiles, but Ahrefs has got some really impressive tools that make it stand out… the way they break down anchor text into different numbered terms makes identifying issues very easy. (Ross Hudgens wrote about the possibility of using term anchor text a while back here: http://www.rosshudgens.com/term-anchor-text/).

The crawler comes in handy, along with the mentions and batch analysis tools.

The graphs it spits out come in handy for reports too.

Advanced Web Ranking – I’ve tested a lot of rank tracking tools and I know that tracking rankings is really difficult, lots of factors involved but you still need a bench mark – this bench mark will help you identify possible issues in the future.

I’ve tried desktop and online based tools to track rankings and I’ve had problems across the board – lack of features, poor reporting but AWR does everything that I need with some crawling and site evaluation tools too.

BuzzStream – most people know that I’m a big fan of BuzzStream, it has so many uses but ultimately, it lets you scale link building in the right way because you build up your “black book” of link building contacts which can help you get more and more links the more you use the system. It also does a great job of pulling in link metrics so you can do quick link analysis tool

Followerwonk – I like link prospecting with Followerwonk because it lets you find true influencers in an industry which means that if you can build a relationship with them, the value goes far beyond just a link.

Google – you can find all the link prospects you’ll ever need by learning how to use Google properly. It sounds basic but you often don’t need fancy tools to scrape Google for you, you can get much more granular by refining your own queries quickly and pulling in the results manually than having to rerun tools.

As for the 3 SEO tools I’d use for link building, I’ll probably pick the following ones:

1. SEO Spyglass – the tool has a huge database that gets regularly updated and it brings back the unlimited number of backlinks and analyzes top backlink page factors (PR, age, Alexa, anchor text, etc.).

2. Google Analytics – pretty obvious, but still, this is the tool I keep open in the browser tabs most of the time.

If you’re looking for actual link building tools (i.e. automated tools) then don’t!

Otherwise if you’re looking for tools to help with the placement of links (i.e. identification of a trustworthy domain) then there are an array of tools such as Archive.org, WHOis, Majestic SEO etc which will help to establish the history of a domain.

My answer would depend on your goal for the tools but getting it down to just 3 may be a problem. Any SEO with clout will advise using an array of tools to ensure you obtain the widest overview possible. I hope that helps.

For the sake of being different, I’ll try to include a few of the less obvious options.

Yesware – I’ve written thousands of words about email outreach and networking over email and if there is one tool I can’t live without, it’s this. Reminders, tracking, customizable templates, it’s got everything a link builder needs for email.

AuthorityLabs – Instead of wasting time tracking the results of your linkbuilding, tools like AuthorityLabs let you get an overview of your current rankings quickly so you can go back to (surprise!) building more great links.

I can give you one tool: Help A Reporter Out (www.helpareporter.com), also known as HARO. It’s a great place to discover journalists and writers that are looking for expert sources, and then reach out to them to be interviewed for their reporting needs. That can lead to great mentions and links from trusted websites — so-called “editorial” links that are given freely and seem to be highly valued by Google.

Hope that helps. I don’t do “traditional” link building anymore, just PR/outreach like I’ve described above.

I love Long Tail Pro. You can integrate it with your Moz free account so that you’ll have the chance to analyze your competitors and their links pretty easily. Other than links you can check site age, domain authority, page authority and page rank of many sites at a glance.

Open Site Explorer is another powerful tool. It gives you many insights about links pointing to a certain page.

As a third tool, I’d think about Microsoft Excel, or other similar softwares (even though it isn’t really a SEO tool). With it you can track your link building strategy, your search engine rankings, your keywords, important websites and email contacts.

I love the Moz Keyword Analysis tool. I don’t think there’s a better tool on the market to quickly analyze the SERPs and really look at how competitive a given keyword will be to rank for. The interface is slicker than ever with the re-brand from SEOmoz to Moz, and their Full Reports are as in-depth as it gets. I use this tool a ton when I’m prospecting for new niches to enter when building websites for myself.

GroupHigh is my favorite blogger outreach tool. It’s Buzzstream’s slicker, more powerful, much more expensive older brother, but I think it’s worth every penny for some of my larger clients. Being able to mass import URLs by the thousands and pull down basic blog information, SEO and traffic metrics, social networking stats and even things like whether or not the blogger normally runs giveaways/guest posts/sponsored posts makes prospecting for new blogger connections a breeze.

Evernote isn’t really an SEO tool, per se, but it is my whole life. I use Evernote to organize any and all information relating to various clients and websites I own, including notes, to-do’s, new content and any important files. This allows me to access the files I need from any device, whether I’m at my apartment, at a client’s office, or on the road. My favorite feature of Evernote, however, has to be the Clearly extension. Whenever I see an article on Inbound.org that I know I want to read, I just hit the Clearly button and the content of the article gets scraped and saved to my Evernote account in a clean, easy-to-read format that I can access offline on my iPad, which makes my Subway rides a million times more productive.

One tool would definitely be Open Site Explorer. Some of the best SEO advice I ever got was ridiculously-simple — Google your target keywords, and see what kind of links the top 3 results have. Then, try to get links from the same places (like publishing a guest post on the same blog, etc.). It’s easy to do with Open Site Explorer and it really works!

Another tool I use is Google’s “sites like” option to find guest blogging opportunities. For example, I have alot of articles published on Site Pro News, but I’m always looking for similar sites that I can contribute to. The “sites like” option has helped me find websites that I may never have found on my own.

I think those are the only 2 tools I really use. Since SEO has changed so much over the past few years, I’ve focused more and more on other opportunities (like guest blogging and even *quality* forums that I can join and build relationships on — not just drop a link on). Luckily, I’ve gotten some great exposure AND some really great links in the process!

In a hypothetical world where I only get 3 tools, the best answer to this question will always be the following:

An email client

A Google search box

A spreadsheet to track it all

I think the smartest link builders would argue that a phone is just as good as an email client. That said, linkprospector.citationlabs.com is the one paid tool I wouldn’t give up – it greatly speeds up the prospecting process. After that, OSE & BuzzStream are the next best additions to our toolset.

Personally, I find the following three tools to be the most important and potentially invaluable in terms of my day to day activities and “tools for your offsite link building campaigns”:

Open Site Explorer – There is really no need to explain in detail why and how we utilise OSE, but mainly the ability to download and manipulate backlink profiles for both clients and competitors is quick and simple.

Ahrefs – I have found Ahrefs to be a great secondary tool, which provides a lot of data, which is easily accessible, which otherwise would involve hours of work when using OSE. For example, anchor text distribution graphs are automatically created and require no additional work when entering a URL into Ahrefs.

Google Webmaster Tools – Although not necessarily within the “tools for your offsite link building campaigns”, it has to be one of the main tools I use day-to-day. A lot of my my time, especially within the last few months, has been focussing on identifying measurable backlink data. Therefore utilising the the ability to download ‘discovered’ backlinks over the last few years is incredibly useful. Especially when conducting backlink audits for new and potential clients.

1. Ahrefs domain comparison. I’ve always been a fan of Ahrefs and this tool tucked away in the site is no different. With it, you can compare up to 4 of your competitors alongside your own domain. It presents very useful data, including link and referring domain counts, backlink sources, TLD types, link types, authority metrics, social lovin’ and more. You can quickly size up the competition with this, before diving into the individual sites. Once you identify some top performers, you can then go into the main section of Ahrefs and export all their links and pivot in Excel to find some great opportunities which your competition has but you might not.

3. LinkRisk. Simply put, you can’t grow a garden without pruning some things here or there. I got in during the beta, but I’ve really been digging on LinkRisk. It does a great job of identifying bad and risky links which you might want to consider disavowing or removing. For sites with a ton of backlinks, this tool saves a lot of time and can also serve as validation for your own opinions about the quality of links, as sometimes this type of judgement can be subjective. I love that you can take an ahrefs or Majestic export and plug it right in, identify different classes of risk and then automatically export a disavow file. It’s simple, useful and plays nice with other tools I already use.

Followerwonk, because I consider that the best way of doing link building is targeting your audience well – its tastes, dislikes et al – but especially analyzing those ones who influence your audience. Try to understand what they like, what they share, from what sites and create that kind of content and target the sites they read and share things from, because it works!

Three link building tools I can’t live without? While I use BuzzStream for management, I think there is some great value in the following tools. With the recent Google updates, I’m spending significantly more time for clients auditing link profiles and cleaning them up before earning them some great value.

Screaming Frog – I use this for anything from site audits, detailed backlink analysis, redirect mapping and so much more. Pair it up with data exported from other tools and it’s a massive time saver. You also can’t beat the customer service that Dan delivers!

Majestic SEO – I know there are a variety of 3rd party link tools available but Majestic has always been one of my favorite sources. It’s affordable, fast and provides the majority of information I’m looking for. That doesn’t mean I don’t still leverage OSE, FWE or other tools for some missing components.

Google/Bing Webmaster Tools – Free information directly from search crawlers! Regardless if some data (links) is not entirely complete, I think it’s extremely valuable to know how crawlers are interacting with your site, how their index matches up with the actual amount of content you are presenting and what roadblocks are being encountered. While I wish the link data from Google was more accurate, I’m happy to have a fairly solid starting point for reviewing potential threats.

1) Google Webmaster Tools – gives you your fundamentals – a place to check how Google is looking at your website. Also one of the best lists of backlinks you can get – links that tools like MajesticSEO and Open Site Explorer don’t pick up. I’ve found link lists in Webmaster particularly useful for combating negative SEO.

2) Majestic SEO – I prefer MajesticSEO to Open Site Explorer. I use this for lots of backlink profile metrics.

3) Moz (SEOmoz) – wide selection of tools to help with SEO. E.g. checks websites for errors and issues and gives keyword competition.

Google Webmaster Tools – Great at detecting issues and the backlink data is definitely more accurate and inclusive. Also offers insight into key term visibility and effectively does your keyword research for you.

I like OSE and MajesticSEO as tools to do competitor research. Not only is it good to find links going to their websites but also other websites the sites link out to which might be relevant for me to hit up in the future.

After that i am a purist — i like google docs and excel spreadsheets. I’ll simply keep a list of what site i’ve reached out to, dates, domain value (seomoz metrics & PR) and relevance. I also utilize this spreadsheet as a little black book in case any of these websites i’ve received a link before are relevant for future projects!

BuzzStream – Every time I discover a new opportunity, I immediately click my Buzzmarker in order to get it queued up in this tool. As someone that really appreciates easy organization, BuzzStream is a lifesaver.

Open Site Explorer – Of course, for backlink research everyone has their preference (whether it be OSE, Majestic, ahrefs). Personally I use all of them, but my “go to” is usually OSE. The export of competitor’s backlink profiles in order to identify their top links is one of my first things I check.

Google Search – Advanced queries in the big G are invaluable to the link building process. I could go on and on about the ways in which to do this, but Geoff Kenyon already wrote a good summary here.

It would depend on many factors including the type and scale of link building. I’ll focus on traditional outreach link building, as I feel that’s what most people are seeking. However, the scale of link building is still a factor here. For example, if I was working with a high budget business with a team of link builders who are getting as many links as they can, all day every day, I would say:

BuzzStream – To keep track of who got a link where (so two link builders don’t approach the same person) and to churn out outreach emails more efficiently.

Ahrefs – To keep track of my back link profile and make sure things look organic and healthy.

Excel – To organize everything properly, keep track of budgets, and assess which terms to go after moving forward.

For a low budget business that is trying to get a small amount of high quality links, I would say:

As a copywriter, I don’t get into the SEO side of things too extensively, but some concepts, like keyword research and on-page optimization, are critically important for my copy to succeed. I use some tools to check SEO health too, but when I’m talking about SEO, I’m more discussing tools I use for keyword research etc…

So, here’s what I use:

1. SEMrush – I use this tool mostly for keyword research. You don’t even need the paid version. Basically, you can type in competing domains and see the exact keywords they’re targeting, as well as where they rank for those keywords. It works great for generating ideas.

2. SeoQuake toolbar – This toolbar is pretty awesome for checking competition. It gives critical stats like domain age and page rank of the pages you that show up in Google’s SERPs. This information is vitally important for me to have when determining which pages and keywords to target when designing clients’ or my own websites.

3. My own eyeballs – I use these because Google wants to give the best rankings to websites that provide the best user experience. That can only be judged by looking at the site yourself. About 80% of the guest post requests I get come from spammy, awful websites I’d never link to. The same goes if I’m guest posting on someone else’s website – I know I’ll get the best SEO value if the site has great content and comes across as a credible resource.

BuzzStream – As far as finding good link prospects is concerned, I love this tool. I have made many channels through this tool and recently have added one more to have a far and wide reach to bloggers. I have been able to pick microinfluencers having conversations about their products. This software really helps me in finding better opportunities easily.

Moz – The best thing i like about this tool is the toolbar provided by Moz Community. It gives us a bunch of SEO metrics in few seconds. I am able to evaluate many things for the initial start-up of the web promotion.

I love other stuff too, like OSE for link analysis, Onpage checklist analysis and recently added Followerwonk for twitter analysis and many more tools which enables quick tasking. All Moz tool makes your workflow easy at the end.

IFTTT – If you are running social media campaign then do not forget to add IFTTT. You will get powerful connection through normal triggers via ‘if’ & ‘then’ statements. There are 57 channels which are associated to this tool. I have setup the same for youtube, twitter and many more channels and i am getting quick reactions through those trigger which i have set already. It becomes easy to measure all social signals from one easy platform.

I am a content based linkbuilder, a buzz marketing, newsjacking, linkbaiting type. I no longer care about seo as such. Don’t get me wrong it’s certainly not dead and never will be. But the aim of the game is to get links, improve brand awareness and improve customer base.

The three tools I mention are what I could not do without, although most will not think that Email and Twitter are a tool, but that is how I use them.

My experience tells me what I need to know about a website these days. Few tools can replicate that

There are many great tools which my team uses for link building and link management. This includes Majestic, Raven, Moz, BuzzStream, Ontolo and recently we’ve been looking at Cognitive SEO as well. But since the question is about what I use I’ll have to go off the beaten path, so I hope it won’t disappoint.

I’ve built so much functionality around Google Webmaster Tools data that I would find it really uncomfortable to plan my campaigns without it. Before I create an outline for a link building campaign I look at the pages that have already attracted natural links and ask a question: “What made this content linkworthy?”. Once I answer that question I can then plan content creation strategy and then focus on outreach. Google Webmaster Tools also helps me prioritise which type of content and keywords are worth targeting. I even built a custom tool which helps me crunch all the Webmaster Tools numbers and streamline the decision making process.

I try to keep link creation process as organic as possible and for this reason I’ve built a tool which helps me track natural links as they happen. Fresh Link Finder analyses three link sources: Google Webmaster Tools, Google Analytcis and server log files. It’s also capable of tracking referrer string data with .js much like Google Analytics code. I log in daily and observe what content has attracted links and the quality of links generated. This allows me to connect with fans, build new relationships and credit those who link to me. From time to time I’ll have an opportunity to correct a link or in rare cases request a removal (if I feel the link is a risk to our link profile). One fun thing is that I can tell that I will get a link from an article before the article goes live (e.g. blogger clicks the link in a post draft before publishing the story).

Link building is relationship building. I like to start with my existing connections to source links from, rather than begging for links form complete strangers. What better place to start with than your own followers on Twitter? I drop my Twitter username in Muil and it gives me a list of users and their websites/blogs in a CSV file. For me that’s a great starting point when building links through relationships. Of course you wouldn’t spam people all at once as social outreach works best when applied on an individual level.

The Link Prospector by Citation Labs is a great tool for finding outreach targets – it’s easy to use, fast, and while you can use advanced search queries in Google, this scales a lot better making it a much more efficient way to do your prospecting.

Once you have your prospects from Link Prospector, you have to determine which targets you should pursue as not all sites and links are equal. The OSE API provides a fast way to do this. There have been several posts written about using gdocs to access the API, but the best way is to use Pyscape.

Additionally, OSE (and Pyscape) are great for doing competitive analysis so that you can determine where to concentrate your efforts.

Your analytics is ultimately what you need to turn to in order to determine how effective your link building is (You don’t have to use Google Analytics, I just like GA, more on that here). Rankings don’t matter, your organic traffic and your revenue matter so it’s important to spend more time in your analytics, understanding what’s happening on your site rather than checking ranking reports.

P.S. This post is part of a 3 part SEO case study. Use these links to check out Part 1 and Part 2. I’m always running ongoing case studies on clambr so if you’re interested make sure you sign up to updates below!

If you could only use 3 SEO tools for your link building campaigns which 3 would you choose?

This is so true . I myself use buzzstream and opensitexplorer as my favorite link building tool
Also can u tell me one thing.Which social buttons are you using for your website. The floating bar ?
Please tell me

Richard, you’ve created a wonderful post (and yes, thanks for adding me to your list)! I’m sure it’ll help SEOs choose their “working tools” and get the most precise data for their projects.

As some guys have mentioned the fourth tool, I’d also add a free backlink tool that delivers thousands of backlinks (with SEO factors included): http://webmeup.com/backlinks/ – works pretty good for my sites.

The Archduke of Linkton sends his warmest regards, indeed he asked me to pass on the fact that he found this post exceedingly stimulating and will be hosting an impromptu jousting tournament in its honour. He tips a warm glass of vintage Port eastwards towards Beijing and has ordered me to tweet CLAMBR haste post haste!

A fab roundup full of endorsements – I love this!!! This kind of post hangout is much more credible than the usual form of hand curated lists – it shows thought for your readership, diversity, interaction, research and engagement! Great!!!! I’ll now be reading the rest of your work Richard.

I have been browsing online more than 3 hours today, yet I never found any interesting article like yours. It is pretty worth enough for me. Personally, if all webmasters and bloggers made good content as you did, the web will be a lot more useful than ever before.

The biggest timesaver in link building is http://netcomber.com . You put in your spreadsheet and it tells you who owns what domains. So no need to contact the same person 100 times, and you can target the right message to the right kind of person.

I just keep it simple with Seo Quake and Alexa. In my opinion there’s no need for fancy, state-of-the-art tools to get the job done, most of which aren’t free.

So long as you know what you are looking for i.e bounce rate below 50%, avg. visitor duration 1.30 – 2.00 minutes then you won’t have to spend on these tools. You can also check if a website is spammy and not worthy of your guest post with the obl checker.

I’ll try not to disappoint you with the next SEO case study. It’s going to be a similar type of expert interview but this time I’m going to refine the process and try to avoid some of the mistakes I made with the promotion of the first roundup.

All will be explained in a teaser post which I’ll send your way on Tuesday. Thanks again and see you around soon!

Have you done the link building in this article for your own website? Did it work, you are still a PR 0? I think this is one of those posts that is very misleading. DONT USE ANY OF THESE TOOLS. These “tools” are a lazy way to build links, and will get you nowhere. Link building is a mirage, and will not get you the success you are looking for. Only 40% of link building SEO campaigns are successful, and of those not many have staying power. Look at the link profile of the top 10 sites when you google your target keyword. Many of the sites will not have masses of inbound links, and some will have 0 links built at all. SEO does not = link building. Link building tools = waste of time and money. Its all about onsite optimization, following the SEO guide by Google, and creating good content.

I’m sorry but you’re more of a troll than a gorilla. Your comment makes no sense whatsoever. Perhaps this is your aim, so people will check out your site?

This post is not misleading. In fact, it is probably the least misleading post about link building tools on the internet. That’s because it is not written from one person’s perspective, but from 55 different people.

If you actually read the above article, rather than skipping directly to the bottom to submit your rant, you will have gathered that the contributors all have various different points of view about what link building is and what link building tools are.

In a nutshell, here’s a list of some of the tools (in alphabetical order) mentioned in this article. If you don’t use ANY of these then I have no idea how you run the SEO services you sell on your site.

You said “DON’T USE ANY OF THESE TOOLS. These “tools” are a lazy way to build links, and will get you nowhere.” Believe me I’m intrigued. Please kindly define a non lazy way to build links without using any of the tools in this article.

Is posting a video on YouTube with a link to your site not link building?
Is Tweeting a link to your site not link building?
Is talking about your site on Facebook and making friends with people who might link to your site not link building?

I hope you get my point.

I originally responded to the rest of your crazy statements from your comment but I’ve removed my full rant from this reply because it’s not what my readers want to see.

Please take your negative attitude somewhere else and next time actually read the article before sharing your judgemental points of view.

Hi Richard,
I’m back!
I’m sorry I couldn’t engage more on this discussion. Well, I’m amazed to see all this engagement and so happy to see that you made this one really viral. Good work mate. You’re doing great.
Hehe, about the Gorilla dude, He was just born to spam. Why don’t you take his comment down? And I recommend you approve comments one by one before making them live. What do you say?

I decided to approve the Gorilla dude to let him have his say. I agree with him that it’s always better to focus on producing great content, but link building is highly necessary and you can’t ignore it if you want to have a fighting chance in competitive industries.

Hope your blog is going well mate! Will jump on to get involved in a discussion some time soon. Just been too busy working on the next roundup that’s going live next week. After that’s gone live I’m going to take a break for a bit, so will come and chill at your site soon.

Hi,
Glad to have another conversation with you too.
Yeps, my blog is going absolutely fine these days. Thanks.
Is it that SEO strategy post you’re talking about? I’ve already read that. Great work mate.

Posts like this are peddling garbage and steering people in the wrong direction. The above comment sis not make sense to you… perhaps white hat is too confusing for you. Enterprise level, and the best in the business do not use any tools like this, it’s all black hat and puts your client at risk. Its not negative, its the truth. I rank high, as do my clients, and my white label clients. My techniques are corporate based and taught at advanced levels. Its harder to do research and optimize a site properly than just build links with tools. These tools are like cooking with infomercial kitchenware.

Having been full time in the game (online marketer) since 2005, I realised early that content (formatted and delivered correctly) was the one thing one thing that would stand the test of time.

Of course, I was not 100% sure back then but with the Panda and Penguin updates I was jumping with joy!

Now, all I do for SEO is to look for popular headlines (Google Search) and tailor the headline to suit the topic. Meanwhile I will on-page optimise the content and rely 100% on social signals from my readers.

That’s it. No tools, really. SEO has never been easier. I’m not a fan of Google, but their updates lately have made me a lot of money and saved me a lot of time.

Thanks for sharing. It’s good to hear you weren’t hit by the Panda and Penguin updates by doing things right from the get go. Nicely done

Like your tactic of looking for popular headlines in Google search and tailoring a headline to suit the topic. I’m actually going to be doing this for my next post hehe. Found a ridiculous content hole that seriously needs filling!!!

Thumbs up!
great work Richard.but with due respect i would like add something to this, that working hard and surfing new things is better than using tools.we learn more as we explore more.so we should look for better ways to make good ranking.
thanks

Wow, tons of details and responses, is there a tool to get so much involvement or to write great posts. This shows me that we are all looking for SEO nuggets! I believe on site factors are super important now and creating keyword rich pages that capture readers attention and a photo and video does not hurt.

I’m am happy knowing that I have come to know and somehow learned to use some of those tools like Buzzstream, Ahrefs, but there’s one tool that is really my favorite, it’s SEMrush. I think every marketers should have it.

One thing is certain, interlinking sites doesn’t help you from a search engine standpoint. The only reason you may want to interlink your sites in the first place might be to provide your visitors with extra resources to visit. In this case, it would probably be okay to provide visitors with a link to another of your websites, but try to keep many instances of linking to the same IP address to a bare minimum. One or two links on a page here and there probably won’t hurt you.

Each of them are the best ones in there own ways. Each one has got a specific specialty compared to the other in the process of utility. Even one has turned a bit primitive compared to other but the utility and value is equally important ever since the came into public. The operating process are sometimes bit tough for a Lehman which requires deep SEO knowledge. Still I would vote for Google tool for its invincible reliability and market value.

Neil Patel introduce me these value link building tools in this post, I need some days to test the tools and more time to study from these famous people, they are all the best SEO and online marketing experts.

Thanks RICHARD MARRIOTT for this post and thanks Neil for introducing me…

For my website I am using one more tool, its name is (www.webmeup.com) tool. By this tool you can easily analysis your website including on-page factors, off-page factors, social media effect on your website, ranking factor and many more.

In above post, mention best link building tools. I am using some of the tools like ahrefs, majestic SEO and Google webmaster tool.

Thanks for sharing your favourite tools. I’ve been using Google Webmaster tool a lot more recently and think it’s awesome. Really good for seeing what keywords you can work on a little harder to rank #1 in the SERP.

I’m using Opensiteexplorer for my link building campaigns. Ahrefs sounds to be a great tool to use, I have tried their free trial, it seems to be great.
But to be honest, I tested between Opensiteexplorer and Ahrefs for a link building campaign, I do see that Opensiteexplorer does update their database more often.

Richard, thank you for interviewing and collecting information!
Good list of link building tools.

I’m fan of free link building tools. I’m from small country with low budgets, so I always need maximize my effort. And bellow is my list of free tools:
1. Google Search – With some browsers plugins you get details of top results. It’s always good to scan TOP100 results and collect prospects.
2. Alltop.com – Best resource for trending blogs in almost all niches.
3. Email – I’m trying use email to contact prospects for build relationship, asking how can help them with and only then ask for help.

I personally think that SEMRush is a grate tool. And I think it has to be mentioned here. Is really good because you can:
-track your website rankings
-spy the competition
-check the backlink profile of a website
-see if your competition is advertising on google and what keywords they are using
Also ahref and google webmestar tool is really nice to have them.

Great article. Amazing post. Full of the top SEO’s on the web, I definitely recognized some of these folks. Thanks for the article read!. Thanks for sharing this information. http://www.dreamdestinations.in/

Hi Richard, honestly tons of thanks from the depth of my heart. I was finding for link building tool from last 2 days, but most of them were fake. Thanks for this awesome list, keep posting such nice info.

1. Awesome post.
2. More awesome idea. You thought of putting together something that is not there already and creating such a useful webpage that has all the big names on it. And now this page has PR 3 and it must have a great boost to your blog as well inviting lots of social shares evidently.

Wow, buzzstream surprised me. I’m familiar with most of the tools and although I have heard of Buzzstream never really thought of exploring it. But if its the top choice of 18 then definitely worth checking out.

I think Google Webmaster Tools is the best tool to track the performance of your website and Google is best platform to build your links. Well written article and bundle of thanks for sharing it with your readers.

I see Ann Smarty`s MyGuestBlog in that list, did`nt Google penalize that network around 6 months back? I`m sure they did. I remember seeing Ann Smarty`s tweets confirming it and seeing it on various seo blogs.

Nevertheless great over post, I personally use AHREFS for link prosecting and analysis.

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